Prediction of Naming Outcome With fMRI Language Lateralization in Left Temporal Epilepsy Surgery
William L. Gross, Alexander I. Helfand, Sara J. Swanson, Lisa L. Conant, Colin Humphries, Manoj Raghavan, Wade M. Mueller, Robyn M. Busch, Linda Allen, Christopher T. Anderson, Chad Carlson, Mark J. Lowe, John T. Langfitt, Madalina E. Tivarus, Daniel L. Drane, David W. Loring, Monica Jacobs, Victoria L. Morgan, Jane B. Allendorfer, Jerzy P. Szaflarski, Leonardo Bonilha, Susan Y. Bookheimer, Thomas J. Grabowski, Jennifer Vannest, Jeffrey R. Binder, on behalf of the FMRI in Anterior Temporal Epilepsy Surgery (FATES) Study
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Naming decline after left temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) surgery is common and difficult to predict. Preoperative language fMRI may predict naming decline, but this application is still lacking evidence. We performed a large multicenter cohort study of the effectiveness of fMRI in predicting naming deficits after left TLE surgery. METHODS: At 10 US epilepsy centers, 81 patients with left TLE were prospectively recruited and given the Boston Naming Test (BNT) before and ≈7 months after anterior temporal lobectomy. An fMRI language laterality index (LI) was measured with an auditory semantic decision-tone decision task contrast. Correlations and a multiple regression model were built with a priori chosen predictors. RESULTS: = 0.032). Preoperative BNT score and duration of epilepsy were not correlated with naming decline. The regression model explained 31% of the variance, with fMRI contributing 14%, with a 96% sensitivity and 44% specificity for predicting meaningful naming decline. Cross-validation resulted in an average prediction error of 6 points. DISCUSSION: An fMRI-based regression model predicted naming outcome after left TLE surgery in a large, prospective multicenter sample, with fMRI as the strongest predictor. These results provide evidence supporting the use of preoperative language fMRI to predict language outcome in patients undergoing left TLE surgery. CLASSIFICATION OF EVIDENCE: This study provides Class I evidence that fMRI language lateralization can help in predicting naming decline after left TLE surgery.